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The Slow Getaway by Dale Z (zdamort) (OWC name - Piemur) - Short, Thriller - Two mobsters on the run need the help of an eccentric drunk to avoid being caught. August '07 One Week Challenge entrant. - rtf, format
I'm a new poster, so I ain't gonna say much other than I liked the descriptions, particularly the inside of the boat. I'm more of JD guy than a Schnapps guy, so I can't relate to much to Vern's facination with the stuff. Really liked the ending.
Failure is only the opportunity to begin again more intelligently - Dove Chocolate Wrapper
Unlike Blakkwolfe, I could see the fascination. After all, a bum is more likely to drink six dollar schnapps than twenty five dollar JD any day.
As far as the story goes, I enjoyed it, but felt it was more of an action/comedy (emphasis) on the comedy than a thriller. This is made heavily apparent by Vern.
I think if you had gone in an entirely different direction with him, making him more silent an ominous, you would have gotten that thriller vibe.
As it stands though, I enjoyed reading it, so nice work there.
I know I'm the last person on earth who should be saying this but you HAVE to work on your formatting. You had the 'magic' screenplay where 5 minutes to night turned into everlasting DAY and there was no beginning slug line and then two EXTRA slug lines. But that aside, I kind of liked it some elements were pretty unoriginal but there was something about it that interested me, so work from there.
-Have you ever transcended space and time?
-Yes. No. Uh, time, not space... No, I don't know what you're talking about
So Vern...funny guy, made the script interesting and is what kept me reading. It was obvious to me that he was working for the rival gang because he couldn't have more explicitly intimated that he was poor but was soon coming into money.
Which basically led me to believe both criminals were kind of dim. And I have a difficult time believing that two dim criminals could score such a big hesit. Also, I thought they were stealing from the guys chasing them, so offering them the money that was rightuflly theirs, doesn't seem like much of an olive branch, but it's very possible I misunderstood that line.
Basically though, Vern really had me laughing when his life was threatened and he responded saying he didn't deserve to die unless the gun toting duo had something against schnapps. The comedy in this was good, but I didn't buy into the suspense or the story.
Very predictable I'm afraid. Some of the later dialogue reveals far too easily what the end result will be. The dialogue for Joey and Sal isn't great. Vern has most of the better dialogue but none of it really realistic to me, in the situation they're all in I mean, it's not real enough. Not much thrilling going on the story either, but more comedy.
I'm disappointed with this one. And to copy decadencefilms@37.com's reviewing style, here are my scores for this one.
I thought the writing here was pretty solid, format as well. The story was alright but it quickly became predictable.
My biggest beef with this script is the characters Joey and Big Sal. They're supposed to be mobsters, right? But the way they acted and talked didn't go hand in hand with their profession. Maybe it's stereotypical but they should curse a lot more; words like cocksucker, motherfucker, fuck (well, you can probably figure out what I wrote) SHOULD be in their vocabulary cuz' we expect that and by removing that - plus the fact that they pretty much act like boyscouts - the characters loses some credibility. They should've just stormed aboard, kicked the shit out of Vern and forced him to fire up the engine and then put two slugs in his brain (why leave a witness, right?).
This was no thriller at all, a light comedy that never really got funny.
I know the mob's branching out...but jet skis? Please.
This was a decent effort. Kick it up a notch or two.
Down in the hole / Jesus tries to crack a smile / Beneath another shovel load
I liked it, but it wasn't my favorite. The story's okay. I liked the twist, except it was a tad predictable.
I thought the ending was too abrupt. Some of the dialogue was off. I didn't believe they were mobsters. They weren't really that rough. Both Joey and Big Sal reminded me of wanna-bes.
This one was fun. It had a few funny spots. Joey and Big Sal kind of reminded me of the guys from Of Mice and Men, Lenny and I forget the other one.
There weren’t any technical issues that I can remember.
I’m not sure what the Styx reference was all about. At first I thought maybe it wasn’t really Vern’s boat. But it was and he knew the name so I’m not sure why he called his boat Styx when he knew otherwise.
I didn’t know exactly what the deal was but I was pretty sure all along that Vern was going to betray them somehow. So it was fairly predictable.
The story was predictable but entertaining. The characters were ok, but I felt that you could have done more with them in the page allotment. The dialogue was good. I found a bit slow in the beginning and I didn't really see too much thriller until the end.
This is another script where it's more of a drama than a thriller...and a light drama at that.
I thought the characters were very two dimensional. Nothing really stuck out with them. When Sal and Joey threatened Vern, I just didn't feel it.
Much of the dialog was forced. Look especially at Joey's dialog on the top of page two:
It looks like a regular boat with a truck cap plopped on top. Ugly as sin, but it will help us hide for a bit
This is a classic example of on-the-nose dialog. People don't speak in such an informative way, unless it's a teacher giving a lecture. When people talk in an informative fashion, there's usually some idle chatter in there.
Predictible as it was, it kept my attention. That said, I enjoyed it. I think, if tweak just a little bit, making it more suspenseful, this would be a great read. All the elements are there.
As for the dialogue, I thought it was uneven. At times it was good, at other times, though, it was, as Phill said, on-the-nose. The descriptives, too, were, imo, uneven. At times it had a "this happens, then that happens..." feel to it. For example, "Joey looks around and spots what he's been looking for in the front, a control panel. Joey walks up to the control panel..."
I've read that movie scripts are twenty percent dialogue and eighty percent visual.
Conversely, television scripts are the other way around.
Now, I don't know how much truth there is to this, but I think that a lot of dialogue without it servicing character and exposition can pull a script down.
In this case, it seems to me that there's quite a bit of dialogue, but there isn't conflict or edge to make it rise above the ordinary.
There was one typo I noticed:
>...help us hid for a bit
Perhaps this script suffers from the bane of many script writers: difficulty bringing freshness and new characters to old stories.
There really aren't a lot of plots to work with when it comes right down to it--maybe a dozen which include getting the prize or the power, revenge, star-crossed lovers...
The thing is, it's not the story that matters so much, but how we hear plausible or even larger than life situations play out in a way we can relate to (or not) but in an interesting way.
Unfortunately, I didn't think this one dug into the characters enough, but it almost did.
At the part where Sal looks at the table with kiddie chairs and then tests one out, it's written down, but there isn't any reaction written into it.
Now, if big Sal sits down, very very gently and his face gives off a pleasing smile and then "BOOM," he falls to the ground while Joey curses at the same time; not because of Sal, but because he's trying to get to the next page of a porno story he's reading and the page is stuck together due to an over abundant spill over of peach schnapps...
...then we're getting more into the moment. The reaction time is very important. If every scene or (I don't know if I'm right here) but if even in smaller movie moments called beats, we can get that reaction time, we are more engaged.
Your overall formatting looks good. I think you just need to work on the finer points of crafting the story; those subtle things that professionals make look so easy.
It would be nice to see more of Big Sal's character brought to life visually.
It's probably a good idea to consider what kind of mood your going for right at the get go because with that in mind, it will carry you through to the end. That kind of consistency really transfers into the work. I don't know how. Maybe it's magic or something, but it just works that way.
Caution though: I've seen movies that strayed from one particular mood to another and mostly, it doesn't work. Audiences gain a certain expectation from the way things are set in the beginning and when the author changes the rules part way through, people aren't too happy.
They are quite happy to go along with all kinds of absurdities, if that's the tone--think the last American Pie movie. My daughter and her male friend were both laughing about how unrealistic it was. "I don't know where these colleges exist in all these movies, but it must be on another planet." is the type of response they gave, but it didn't make them laugh less.
The thing is though, we don't mind over the top if it's expressed in the beginning, that: "It's entertainment!" Join us for the ride.
This was a good effort, and I appreciate the fact that there weren't a lot of typos.
Thanks for reading and reviewing. I appreciate it and your criticisms no doubtedly will help me in future scripts.
Just a couple notes\responses to certain things:
- Schanpps. Vern drinks Schnapps because it's cheap. I personally love Schnapps, and was drinking it when I came up with the idea for this script.
- Swearing. Yeah, I probably should have made my 'mobsters' more vulgar. For some reason I decided to keep this script clean. It was my first simplyscript contest script and I didn't want to offend anyone. That was a mistake!
- Comedy. Yes, this has a very comedic feel to it. Most of my work is comedy. I'm a funny person(or so I like to think) and it really comes through in my scripts, even when it isn't fitting. I wanted Vern to be eccentric, not comedic. Fine line. And I failed.
- Formatting. Ziggy says I have formatting problems. I don't see them, and neither did anyone else.
- Stampede. You said, " Also, I thought they were stealing from the guys chasing them, so offering them the money that was rightuflly theirs, doesn't seem like much of an olive branch "
That is very wrong, and I suggest you re-read the script one day if you're bored.
- Predictable. Some say the story was predictable. Really? I must work on this. How you could know that Vern was promised a payoff before getting on the boat is a mystery to me. How you could also know Patch and his boys would meet up with the boat on jet skis, and throw a grenade in the window(although the grenade was foreshadowed) to kill them...is beyond me. I have to work on that I suppose.
Thanks again for reading. And if you haven't read it yet, please do. I could always use more constructive criticism to help me improve!